When do smartphones displace face-to-face interactions and what to do about it?

Philippe Verduyn*, Julia C. C. Schulte-Strathaus, Ethan Kross, Ute R. Hülsheger

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

There is a public concern that smartphone communication undermines well-being by displacing face-to-face interactions. However, research on this “social displacement hypothesis” has provided mixed results. We examined when this hypothesis holds true (within-persons vs. between-persons) and tested an intervention to decrease smartphone communication. Participants (N = 109) reported daily on smartphone communication, face-to-face communication, and emotional well-being for fifteen days. At day six, participants were assigned to a mindfulness-treatment intervention group or a no-treatment control group. The social displacement hypothesis was confirmed at the within-person but not between-person level. Specifically, when someone communicates a lot using her smartphone during a particular day, that person engages in less face-to-face interactions during that same day. However, people who tend to spend a lot of time communicating on their smartphone do not engage in less face-to-face conversations than people who largely refrain from smartphone communication. The mindfulness-intervention reduced daily smartphone communication, which decreased negative emotions
Original languageEnglish
Article number106550
Number of pages8
JournalComputers in Human Behavior
Volume114
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2021

Keywords

  • Smartphone communication
  • Face-to-face interaction
  • Social displacement
  • Mindfulness
  • MINDFULNESS INTERVENTION
  • INTERNET PARADOX
  • BENEFITS
  • COMMUNICATION
  • QUALITY
  • WORK

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